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    Nature. 1990 May 31;345(6274):449-52.

    Presentation of viral antigen controlled by a gene in the major histocompatibility complex.

    Cerundolo V, Alexander J, Anderson K, Lamb C, Cresswell P, McMichael A, Gotch F, Townsend A.

    Institute of Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, Oxford, UK.

    We describe a mutant human cell line (LBL 721.174) that has lost a function required for presentation of intracellular viral antigens with class I molecules of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), but retains the capacity to present defined epitopes as extracellular peptides. The cell also has a defect in the assembly and expression of class I MHC molecules, which we show can be restored by exposure of the cells to a peptide epitope. This phenotype suggests a defect in the association of intracellular antigen with class I molecules similar to that described for the murine mutant RMA-S (ref. 5), but in the present case the genetic defect can be mapped within the MHC locus on human chromosome 6.

    PMID: 2342577 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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